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Exhibiting Animals in Europe and America

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Exhibiting Animals in Europe and America Synopsis

This edited volume, written by historians of art and visual culture who are working in the field of animal studies, seeks to understand how our ways of positioning (and ex-positioning) animals have separated us from the other-than-human animals that are an integral part of our interconnected world.

Bringing together the visual and material culture of display with recent theoretical study on human-animal relations, the book draws attention to ways in which we might rethink this history and map pathways for the future. Defining the idea of exhibition and display broadly, chapters consider a diverse range of media, including paintings, anatomical sculpture, books, prints, and clothing; exhibition venues that take place in both the public and private realms; and key ideas such as looking at/looking back, seeing/being seen, and interspecies recognition. The authors cover topics that span the sixteenth through the early twentieth centuries and focus geographically on Europe and America, with significant content related to Canada, Indigenous America, and Latin America.

The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, visual studies, museum studies, animal studies, and environmental humanities.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781032593890
Publication date:
Author: Mary Elizabeth Boone, Lianne McTavish
Publisher: Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 216 pages
Series: Routledge Research in Art History
Genres: History of art
Ethics and moral philosophy
Museology and heritage studies
The environment
The arts: general topics